The Ying Yang Twins widen their narrow spectrum with
USA (United State of Atlanta) by adding
Black Eyed Peas and
OutKast's attitudes toward albums to their already slick and sleazy party crunk. At 77 minutes and 23 tracks, the sprawling album is weighed down by some filler and redundant numbers, but as a step forward for a party band riding on whatever the Dirty South sound of the moment is, it's surprisingly bold and accomplished. At the time of its release, the sleazy, catchy, and downright gimmicky "Wait (The Whisper Song)" was blowing up on radio, but as another party single from a group that's released a truckload, it doesn't represent the risk-taking attitude of the album. Although a guest shot from
Maroon 5's
Adam Levine seems like an uninspired attempt at pop crossover, the alterna-singer blends well with the boys on "Live Again," a look inside the life of a stripper that's deep and bleak, not misguided and ridiculous like you'd expect from these former jokesters. Southern regulars like
Mike Jones,
B.G.,
Pitbull, and
Lil Scrappy all shine here, but the earthy and soulful
Anthony Hamilton rises above all others, taking
the Twins deep into the world of
the Isley Brothers on the sincere and spiritual "Long Time." "Ghetto Classics" is the album's mind-blowing moment, with the duo commenting on African-Americans' role in the military and urban history over a fierce
Art of Noise loop. Anchoring all this musical exploration is the usual riding on 24s, bragging about their grills, worshiping booty, and the other hedonistic things that are at the heart of the best
Ying Yang tracks. The middle of the album is devoted to freaky sex with "Wait" as the centerpiece, so don't think they're trying to deliver a crunk
What's Going On as much as a dirtier
Elephunk. They succeed, and had they named the album after "Ghetto Classics" they would have been only slightly overselling it. [
USA (United State of Atlanta) was also made available in a clean version, with all explicit material removed.] ~ David Jeffries